BMX/Kids

Used kids’ bikes

We have a trade-up program for kids’ bikes, therefore we have used kids’ bikes for you to buy. The selection varies, so check in here or visit the store to see what we have on hand.

These bikes are usually ones that we originally sold, and lots of them even come with the original warranty. we tune-up each bicycle to make sure that they are safe and ready for the next child to enjoy. Some bikes have new parts, and we’ll stand behind all of our used bikes for one year.

Scott Voltage jr. 20 and 24

Scott Voltage 24

These little mountain bikes are so cool, they may get more attention from junior than the phone or the dog.
So maybe you’ll need to train the dog to go mountain biking.

Scott’s Voltage models have all of the features that you’d expect from adult-size mountain bikes, only they’re not for adults. Even though they’re designed for kids, The bikes come with suspension forks with adjustable spring rates. They come with grip shifters. There’s the triple front crankset and a total of 24 speeds on the 24. The Voltage 20 gets a single front ring and bash guards surrounding the chain. These bikes have quick-release seat clamps and quick-release levers for the wheels. You can fit a rear rack on the 24. Both bikes come with kickstands. There’s even room for a water bottle cage!

Voltage 20

Click on either picture (to enlarge it) and check out the rectangular and heptangular aluminum frame tubes! These are really great looking bikes. They’re light, sturdy, and perfectly sized for young mountain bikers between 5 and 12 years old.

/Voltage 24 models (the green ones) are on sale right now for only $385! That’ll save you $75 off of the regular price.

Scott Voltage 24 Disc

Scott Voltage 24 disc

This is the real deal.

A real high-performance mountain bike for kids.

Got a kid in the Park and Rec mountain bike program? Got a family that likes to ride around the Port Gamble trail system on the weekends? Then you have a reason to check out this Scott.

Perfect for 8 to 12 year-old trail shredders or adults under 5′ tall, the Voltage has everything you’d want in a real off-road bike. It has a light aluminum frame, a Suntour 80mm travel suspension fork with a lockout, Tektro disc brakes, high-performance wheels with quick-release hubs and Syncros alloy rims, aluminum platform pedals and a terrific drivetrain.

The components will survive repeated rides in the rain and mud, the brakes will work flawlessly with a light pull on the small levers, and the overall weight will astound you.

A great bike at a pretty reasonable price (under $500), and we’ll even take it back as a trade-in when junior grows out of it.

Wooden Balance Bikes

Flames make ‘em faster

Balance bikes are a great alternative to tricycles or little bikes with training wheels.

With these little bikes, your child will learn to ride much more quickly than with training wheels. Junior will be safer too, as steep, off-camber yards and driveways are much less treacherous than with a tippy tricycle.

The Evo scoot bikes are less expensive than similar wooden versions, and yet they still come with pneumatic rubber tires.

Made with heirloom quality construction, these little guys should last through multiple kids.

Sporty blue

Quality construction and details

Wow, those flames just look fast.

The wooden construction is plenty strong, and it’s nice and light. If the bike takes a tumble you won’t have to worry about sharp metal edges scratching furniture, the car, or your little rider.

Used SE Racing Floval Flyer 24

Floval Flyer $539

Here’s a great ride for the local pump track…
A Floval Flyer from SE Racing. The 24″ size means that the bike is comfortable for an adult, yet still pretty nimble for a kid under 5′ tall.
This one is in new condition. It has upgraded Redline pedals, a Ritchey Comp seatpost, and S & M handlebars.
A new Floval Flyer equipped like this one would run you $750. Buy it now for only $539.

Fuji Kit Series

Fuji Kit 16

Kit 16 in purple

Fuji’s “Kit” series of bikes have some great choices for little girls. The colors are bold and sparkly, most available in very pink as well as a not-so-pink paint option. They come in 12” and 16” sizes with training wheels, and in 20” with kickstands.

All of the bikes have coaster (pedal) brakes, and the 20″ version has an additional hand brake.

We stock the Kit series bikes year round in all of the color options. Sometimes we also have a few of these bikes in used versions that have been traded in.

Worried that your little girl is going to outgrow her bike before you even get it home? We take trade-ins when it’s time for the next size.

Fuji Dynamite Comp 24

Dynamite Comp in white

The Dynamite Comp is really well built. We promise it won’t explode.

The Comp has an adjustable suspension fork, so a rider can hit the trails behind the house and not get too rattled. This version shares the same light-weight aluminum frame with the standard Dynamite 24, so it’s nice and light (an important feature when you only weigh 70 pounds). Like the standard Dynamite, you get tough aluminum wheels, Shimano derailleurs, grip shifters, a quick-release adjustable seatpost and a kickstand.

Fuji Dynamite Comp in red

So what’s the difference between the standard Dynamite and the Comp? Gears. Lots and lots of gear choices. The Dynamite Comp comes with a triple-chainring front crankset like those that you’ll find on adult bikes, along with a front derailleur and shifter. With a total of 21 speeds, young riders can keep up while riding with adults, and they get the gear range they need to handle the biggest hills.
If you have a kid who wants to keep a fast pace as everyone rolls around the Port Gamble trails or while riding in the Grand Forest, the Dynamite Comp is the right bike.
Bikes like the Dynamite Comp typically work for kids in the 8 to 12 year old age range. Fast-growing preteens will be ready for an adult bike at about 5′ tall.
Be sure to bring in any bike that junior has outgrown. We take trade-ins.

Fuji Ace 24 & 650

Fuji Ace 24

This is a rare bike.

A real road bike for kids. In stock.

As light and well-equipped as a starter racing bike for adults, the Ace 24 is perfect for the little speed demon in your family. It doesn’t come with Shimano STI levers, opting for simpler (and less expensive) handlebar-mounted toggle switches. What the bike does have is 14 speeds, quality wheels and brakes and cool styling.

The Ace 24 will work pretty well for most kids in the 8 to 12 year age range. With 24″ wheel, reduced length cranks, a narrow handlebar, and small-size brake levers, this bike will fit just right.

Fuji Ace 650

if we need to go a little bit bigger, Fuji does the Ace 650 for kids and adults in the 4’9″ to 5′ tall range.

These bikes are exceptionally hard to get our hands on, so if you want one, don’t hesitate to come in and grab it.

Scott Scale Jr.

Scale jr. 24

You want a bike that’s fast and reliable for yourself, so why would you put your best little riding buddy on something that you wouldn’t ride off-road?

The Scott Scale jr. is a high quality off-road rig with lots of great features. Like most good mountain bikes, the Scale jr. has a suspension fork with an adjustable spring rate and a lock-out switch. There are 24 speeds to choose from (using gripshift shifters), light and responsive wheels, strong V-brakes, quick-release levers for the wheels and the seatpost, and a place for a water bottle cage.

This bike is light, fun and reliable. It has all of the things you would want in a bike for yourself, but you can’t have it. You’re too tall.

SE Racing’s Creature and So Cal Flyer

A Floval Flyer in Creature Skateboard colors

SE does a great job coming up with new (but still old-school) BMX bikes each year.

One of the new bikes for 2016? A special edition Floval Flyer honoring Creature skateboards.

This bike is fantastic. 24″ Tuff Wheel mags not only look great, they ride great. Like most BMX bikes, this one only comes with a rear brake, but it can be fitted with a front brake if you’ll be riding on the street.

The intermediate 24″ size is big enough for adults to ride without feeling foolish (or killing your back). The bike is still small enough, however, to really perform well at the track.

Creature Feature

The So Cal Flyer

Speaking of tracks, I want someone out there to buy one of these and then go try out the following ride parks: The colonnade park in Seattle, the Peninsula BMX track in Port Orchard, and finally the new mountain bike pump track in Poulsbo. Ride all three of these venues on your Creature and then try to claim that you’re bored.
If you don’t consider yourself a “Creature Fiend” or simply prefer wire wheels to mags, check out the So Cal Flyer. It’s basically the same bike with wire-spoke 24″ wheels and it’s under $400!

Fuji Dynamite 20

Dynamite 20 in magenta

These little Fuji mountain bikes are the first steps beyond training wheels and coaster-brakes. Family rides and trips to school will be more fun than with starter bikes as these light-weight geared bikes are designed so that the children can lead the way, not struggle behind.
The Dynamite 20 has a scaled-down suspension fork, so little riders can hit the trails on the way to school and not get too rattled. The Dynamite has an aluminum frame, so it’s nice and light (an important feature when you only weigh 50 pounds).

Fuji Dynamite in grey

Dynamite 20s come equipped with a rear derailleur and has 6 gears controlled by a single grip-shifter along with hand brakes. No coaster brakes on these bikes, but the parts selection should be simple enough for kids moving into their first geared bike. Dynamites come in some great colors, and should last long enough to be handed down to a little brother or sister (or traded in for the next size bike).

SE Racing Big Ripper

Big Ripper 29

Here’s a chance to relive your youth.

Remember the early ’80′s? BMX was all the rage. As a teen or pre-teen, all you ever wanted was an awesome BMX bike. SE Racing’s PK Ripper and Quadangle BMX bikes had to be the most awesome.

The PK Ripper was probably the first BMX bike made out of aluminum, and man was it light. Perry Kramer rode it, and you wanted to be like Perry Kramer.

Maybe your parents scoffed back in the early ’80′s when you said you wanted a PK Ripper. Maybe you had a Quadangle, but it got stolen that first time you rode it to your job at Domino’s pizza. Whatever your circumstance, here’s your chance for a do-over.

The Big Ripper. BMX for big kids.

SE Racing Quadangle and OM Flyer 26″

Quadangle 26

Don’t these bikes just make you smile?

Part of SE Racing’s retro series of bikes, these are the two mid-sized nostalgia sleds.

The Quadangle started out as the ST-1 racing bike, and man was it cool. In the early 80′s, every kid who raced BMX wanted a Quadangle (I know I did). The bike was designed for star BMX racer Stu Thompson, and while Stu now works as a video producer and is in his 50′s, you still want to be like him…

The OM Flyer 26″

The OM Flyer (in honor of “Old Man” Scott Breithaupt), is another 26″ wheeled BMX bike for big kids (we also have SE’s So Cal Flyer and Creature models, both available with 24″ wheels). Enjoy riding the snappy cromoly frame and enjoy keeping your back and joints healthy by riding an adult-sized bike.

When would you ride a bike like these? Well, they’re pretty awesome for just cruising around. Use ’em to run downtown, do a few errands, maybe ride around the park (or the Poulsbo pump track) with your kids, or just go out and relive your youth for an hour or so. Just like when you were 12, grab your bike anytime you want to have some fun.

Fuji Dynamite 24

Dynamite 24 in green

Dynamite!

Absolutely dynamite. This is a fantastic kids’ bike at a good price. Outfitted with a few key features (and omitting other distracting add-ons), this Fuji is configured just right for a lot of kids out there.
The Dynamite has an adjustable suspension fork, so a rider can hit the trails behind the house and not get too rattled. All of the parts like the saddles, handlebars, brake levers, pedals and cranks are scaled down to fit your 4 to 5′ tall rider really well. You get a genuine Shimano derailleur, lightweight aluminum components and even a kickstand. The Dynamite has an aluminum frame, so it’s nice and light (an important feature when you only weigh 70 pounds).

Dynamite in blue

These bikes come equipped with 7 gears controlled by a single grip-shifter, a combination that seems to be just about the right amount of complexity for kids moving into their first geared bike.
Like most of Fuji’s bikes, these models come in some great colors that are sure to please even the pickiest little rider.
The bikes are built to be tough, and should last long enough to be handed down to a little brother or sister (or traded in for the next size bike).

SE Racing Ripper and Lil’ Ripper

SE Racing Ripper 20

SE Racing has been THE name in BMX for over 30 years. SE Racing really focuses on BMX (you won’t see a triathlon bike or a hybrid bike with their logo on it). Each year the folks at SE refine single-speed BMX bikes to give kids more fun and better performance.

The Ripper (originally the “PK Ripper”, named for star racer Perry Kramer) is one of the more famous and sought-after racing bikes. The Ripper is still around, and it has been refined over the years for maximum fun and minimum weight (a good value too, now under $340).

16″ Lil’ Ripper

Of course older kids have been well-supported by a stable of great racing models from SE. Sometimes it’s hard being the younger kid. The Ripper made little kids in need of a real BMX bike a bit envious.

Now big kids won’t be the only ones who get to have fun with a bike from SE Racing. While big brother rips up the track on his Ripper or Quadangle, a younger brother or sister can shred just as hard on their Lil’ Ripper.

The Lil’ Ripper is a great bike. Well-proportioned, easy to handle, light and tough. Comes with great BMX styling including pads and a number plate, this bike will give junior all the performance he needs.

Ripper in white

Number plates come with either model

The Lil’ Ripper is built with a light aluminum frameset along with awesome 16″ aluminum wheels. It has a freewheel with a hand brake just like on bigger bikes, and will still accept training wheels for easy learning.

Raleigh Rowdy and Lily

Raleigh Lily

Either of these Raleighs will work great for your 6 to 8 year old child.

The Rowdy and the Lily models are the next steps beyond training wheels and coaster-brake bikes. They will help your little guy or gal tame a hilly neighborhood with a range of easy to manage gears. Dual hand brakes will help bring them to a safe stop. Family rides will be more fun, as these light-weight geared bikes are designed so that the children can lead the way, not struggle behind.

Raleigh Rowdy

Made with aluminum frames and components, these Raleigh’s weigh a fraction of what you’ll find at a toy store or Walmart. These bikes can fit a water bottle, come with hand brakes, a quick adjust lever for the seat height, chain guards, and six gears with a twist-grip style shifter. In order to save a little weight (and some cash), these bikes come with rigid front forks instead of shock forks.

Kazam Balance bikes

Kazam balance bike

Kazam balance bike in green

Balance bikes are a great alternative to tricycles or little bikes with training wheels. With a balance bike, your child will learn to ride a bike much more quickly than with training wheels. Bad habits get corrected naturally, and there is no confusion about pedaling direction and coaster brake application. Junior will be safer too, as steep off-camber yards and driveways are much less treacherous than with a tippy tricycle.

Kazam has made great balance bikes for your little one. They come with pneumatic rubber tires, not slippery hard plastic wheels. The frames are made out of aluminum, not steel. Whole bikes weigh much less than what you’ll get at a toy store, and will be easier for a small child to handle. If you have a steep driveway and yard you can get a version with a hand brake. There are plenty of bright colors. Kazam balance bikes come in orange, green, blue, red and pink. Pretty good value too, coming in at $120.

Redline Conquest 24

Redline Conquest 24

You asked for it, so now we have it.

A cyclocross and/or road option for the elementary school set.

The Conquest 24 is efficient enough for junior to keep up with you on road rides (watch out!). It provides all of the features and speed needed to race the junior events at the Seattle Cyclocross series, and with a switch of tires, can handle summer road racing or the Chilly Hilly. Redline designs their bikes here in Seattle, and they have done a great job here with a fun, safe and versatile bike for local riders.

Seven-time national cyclocross champion (and Bremerton resident) Logan Owen won his first 3 championship titles on one of these.

Used Mirra 8Ten

Mirra 8Ten

If you have a kid (or are a kid) who is already creating mayhem at the skate park on a starter bike, you should check out the Mirra 8Ten.

This bike is as tough and as capable as the Mirra Bronson or the No. 7, it’s just smaller.

The 18″ wheels are perfect for a kid who has the balance and abilities for hitting the jumps and the skate park, but is lacking the size to control the bigger bikes.

This used 8ten is a steal! Normally this bike would run you $370, but we had our last rider grow out of his so you can get it lightly used for only $249.

Unicycles

Torker Unistar DX

Torker Unistar LX

If you ever feel like running away and joining the circus, you had better be prepared. Learn to ride a unicycle! It’s fun. It’s (relatively) easy. A lot of the junior high schools in the area have unicycling as part of their gym program. Once you learn how, you could ride a unicycle in the Chilly Hilly next year! Heck, you could join dozens of unicycle riders in the Kingston or Bainbridge Island July Fourth parades.

Or you could learn how to juggle.

We stock basic Torker brand unicycles, and can order more deluxe versions with just a couple of days lead time. We keep replacement unicycle pedals, saddles, bearings and tires in stock all of the time.

About our website…

Buy it now

You may have noticed that many of the bikes on our website are lacking prices.
We also seem to be missing an “add to shopping cart” button.
These omissions are purposeful.
We like bikes. We like you. We want you to ride a bicycle that works well, fits you correctly, and is appropriate for the kinds of riding that you like to do.
We can’t make all of this happen through a website.
If you want a new bike, come in to Classic Cycle. Talk to us. Touch the bicycles. You can ride around Winslow, and see what the different models have to offer.
Come in to the shop, and Gavin will make some adjustments to the bike to make it fit just right (and tell you about the time he won that race in Sicily while he’s at it).
Sit at our bar and watch bike racing on the television or experience a bit of our little museum.
Spend some time here so that Jaime can show you clothing and accessories that will resolve the little issues that nag at you while you ride.
Paul will assemble your bike with the same attention to detail that went into building bikes for two Olympic Games and countless professional racers.
Leave the UPS guy alone. He can’t help you put that mail-order bike together…